WEDNESDAY, MAY 18:1938 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS P PAGE THREE A Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society DOROTHY JANKE, c'8, Society Editor Before 5 p.m., call K.U.21; after 2:029 - K2029 The Chi Omega Alumnae Association entertained at dinner Monday evening at Evans' Hearth in honor of the 70th anniversary of the full fellowship who are members: Lacille Springer Katherine Foster Helen Tibbets Buriana Gold Barbara Gollback Helena Shafer Betie Wasson Mary Lee Ernestine Swifford Emlen Joelson Mrs. L. K. Flint and Mrs. J. J. Kistler entertained us tea Sunday at the home of Mrs. Flint for active and alumnae members of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalism sorcerer Miss Margaret Lynn and Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes poured. Guests present were: Mrs. Louisa Don Carlos Mrs. W.A. Dill Mrs. Eileen Buckley Jean Bulley, c'38 Elizabeth Carr, c'sp Audith Curel, c'unel Louise Pecoron, c'99 Candi Curel Grace Valentine, c'38 Ruth Timpin, c'39 Members of Delta Upsilon fraternity entertained with their annual spring formal Friday evening. The following were guests: Weekend guests at the Alpha Chi Catherine Cannon, ed; ucl Elizabeth Duncan, cud Jay Allen, jacq Jeanne Lecch, c41 Elizabeth Barclay, cunl Margaret Charles, c40 Melinda McKenna, cunl Bettie Jane Boddington, c48 Mary Ellen DeMott, c38 Bettie Anne Wilkinson, cunl Jean Robinson, cunl Jean Jane Patton, cunl Nancy Neelyn, cunl Jay McKenna, cunl Cecilia MacKinnon, cunl Hee Hebbit, cunl Virginia Gray, c41 Marine Treemann, c41 Strauffer, cunl Erma Wahl, cunl Nancy Kesler, fa; 41 Jane Montgomery, fa; 41 Rollefond, fa; 39 Phyllis Wellerith, fa; 38 Virginia Varga, c41 Lucile Myers, c41 Nigel Robertsen, c43 Bob Pearson, c38 Leigh Fischer, Amarillo, Texas Jay Allen, Dodge City Mr. and Mrs. Andre Gromicka Heinrich Heinrich, Columbia, Mo. Elizabeth Noelle, Columbia, Mo. Elizabeth Noelle, Columbia, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wright, Lawrence M. M. Carson Omega house were: Pigg Garden, Hardeninch, Hardeninch, Hardeninch Helen Muller, Kansas City, Mo. Cheyletis Beale, Kansas City, Kan. Bette Annes, Kansas City, Virginia Wallace, Kansas City, Mo. Dr. and Mrs. John O. Skinner of Kansas City, Mo., announce the marriage of their daughter, Helen Mary, to Bardier B. Shriver, son of William S. Shriver of Kansas City. The marriage took place there Saturday morning. --been an unusual number of candi, camera pictures taken this spring, and for certain reasons, John Kline is anxiously awaiting to buy one of the Sour Owl's this morning, hopes (2) that a picture of him and a little Pi Phi (not to mention his name) is not in. Mrs. Thayer is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and a graduate of the University. Strayer is a graduate of the University of California, with a law degree from Temple University, Philadelphia. --been an unusual number of candi, camera pictures taken this spring, and for certain reasons, John Kline is anxiously awaiting to buy one of the Sour Owl's this morning, hopes (2) that a picture of him and a little Pi Phi (not to mention his name) is not in. Mrs. Scott of Wichita was a dinner guest at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house Monday evening. ~ Acacia fraternity announces the pledging of George Logan, c'41, of Lawrence. Sunday dinner guests at the Alphe Omicron Pl house were: Glenn Fou, eunl Gortteau, Kansas City, Kan Beatrice胡堡, Halstead Dinner guests at the Kappu Sigma house Sunday were: Mrs. and M.E. C. Allderdice, Coward, Mrs. Hazzard, Coldwater Mrs. Hazzard Mrs. Hazzard, Coldwater Mary Wilson, Topeka Thirty-nine Finish Thirty-nine Finish G. R. Training Course Thirty-nine women have received certificates of award for completing the course in Girl Reserve training. This course is sponsored by the Y.W.C.A. and the School of Education, and consisted of six lectures and picnic plans for the Girl's College of the Liberty Memorial High School. Those who received certificates are: Margaret Gabeck, c38; Ruth Boisseau, ed'uncl; Alvena Breechen, c38; Dorothy Caldwell, c38; Ruth Clark, gr; Dorothy Clenden, c38; Mary Elizabeth Cordell, gr; Jane Craven, c'38; Clero DeCamp, Alben Herdon, c'38; Alice Hess, c'38; Mildred Hauser, c'39; Ann Hock, c'38; Virginia Huntington, c'38; Dorothy Janke, c'38; Jessie Lemon, c'38; Lucia Mavley, fa'38; Ala Dell Meinke, c'38; Ethel Newland, c'38; Mary Lou Oliver, c'38; Lacille Roach, c'38; Mary Schumauffell. Helen Schlotzauer, c;38 France; Sewell, c;38 Easher Shively, c;38 Sholander, c;38 Martha Shrunt, Eleanor Slaten, c;38 Foresstra Chait, c;38 Mary Thies, c;38 Violet Thiele, c;38 Katryn Turner, c;38 Dorothea Weingartner, c;38 Elizabeth Wiggins, c;38 Katryn Goldsmith Mildred Grable, c;38 Hele Wilson, c;38 Royena Kipp, fau'nl Conventioners Visit Here Seventy-five delegates to the convention of the General Federation of Women's Clubs in session in Kansas City, Mo., visited Spooner-Thayer museum Saturday. Mrs. A.J. Mauer of Parkville, Mo., chairman of the committee on fine arts of the Missouri Federation of Women's Clubs, is in charge of the Women's Pilgrimage into Kansas. The tour included a stop at Baldwin to see the celebrated Bishop Quyle collection of Bibles at Baker University, a visit to Haskell Institute during the morning, and to Thayer museum in the afternoon, where a group of 25 University women met the visitors and conducted a Charity E. H. Lindley made a brief talk about the University and its activities. Refreshments were served in the auditorium to visitors from all parts of the country, including Nebraska, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Iowa, Rhode Island, Maryland, Michigan, Illinois, Newark, Massachusetts, North Dakota, New Jersey, Washington. D.C., Arizona, and Nevada. To Formally Dedicate Auditorium to Ex-Governor Unvelling of a plaque dedicating the University of Kansas auditorium to the late Gov. Edward Hoch will be a feature of the Commencement season. The ceremony probably will be held some time during the afternoon of Sunday, June 5. Ed Hackney, of Wellington, a graduate of 1895 and sponsor of the resolution in the legislature under which the building was named, is expected to speak briefly. The current issue of Down Beat, a national news magazine for dance musicians, features a half-page article with a three-column picture on Louie Kuhn and his University band. The story, written by Dave Dexter of the Kansas City Journal-Post, praises the band highly and predicts a brilliant future for it. 'Down Beat' Gives Louie Kuhn's Band Words of Praise Dexter is especially lavish in his praise of Kuub's first trumpet player, Dale Shroff, cured. He forecasts that in a year or two Schroff, alongside Yank Lawson, George Irwin, or Benjamin Goodman, or benny The way the band plays such numbers as "Roll 'Em" "Down South Camp Meeting" "Remember" and "I Never Knew," sounds enough like Goodman to fool professional phycon, Dexter says. He heard the band when it played at the Phi-Mo Theater, where he has improved greatly since he last heard it at Fairland park last summer. On the Shin-been an unusual number of candi, camera pictures taken this spring, and for certain reasons, John Kline is anxiously awaiting to buy one of the Sour Owl's this morning, hopes (2) that a picture of him and a little Pi Phi (not to mention his name) is not in. Dexter ends with the suggestion that Kuhr's hand could have a host of jobs awaitting it, and would be a discovery for any booking agency. $12.50 Eloise Pohl gets today's ticket to the Dickinson theater, to see "Doctor Rhythm," starting Bing Crossby. Phone K.U. 66 Generally fair and somewhat warmer in east portions Wednesday; partly cloudy Thursday. Hillties: Why Is Jack Flahue called "Fire-Chief"? Who was the sorority maid seen after closing hours walking down what street she lived in, and nearly certainly." The Ph Dell are getting the habit of making their waiters eat what they don't want themselves. It's too bad that Bill Rowlands is AFRAID of certain Ph Gam news reaching the Shin. A "bad" husband has Hasselle Bash in both suitings said to be in today's Sour Owl." It's funny what some people won't do. Even the other night, some of the more playful Phil Giam's put a toad in Tom Mangelderd's bed. The more questioning part of the incident is what happened to the toad? Tom, who didn't know it was morning, the toad was nowhere to be found. Then again, maybe Tom is playing a joke on his brothers. Phone K.U. CLASSIFIED ADS WEATHER WANTED: To buy a used portable type writer. Phone 806. -157 REWARD for return of notes in black leather zipper notebook left in Qualita Namibia laboratorium Thursday afternoon Amber Lab. Henry Dheyer, 1435 - 1515 Phone 552- 8 and 10 mm. Motion Picture Films Cameras, Projectors, and Supplies IVA'S LOST: Hemsi slide rule in dark brown hame made leather case. Taken from R.O.T.C. office. Wednesday afternoon at R.O.T.C. office. To obtain a copy or leave at R.O.T.C. office. - 457 Take pictures in theaters, on the street, from the trains and in the home of your friends. Unposed, informal pictures, the kind you see in newspapers, in LIFE and other magazines. Thirty-six pictures with one loading of fast motion picture film. With a few lights you can make them indoors. You can own a Candid Camera for as little as CANDID CAMERA Shampoo and Wave 35c Complete Permanents $1.50 up Phone 533 9411½ Mass, St. It's the Rage Candid Cameraing --- HIXON STUDIO 765 Mass. Tel. 41 Phone K.U. 66 RENT: Apartment, private bath, nicely furnished, electric refrigerator, good location. Living room, dressing room, kitchen, bedroom, kitchen paid except electricity. SydneyAnother, bathroom paid except electricity. Sydneynew furniture, living room, bed room, kitchen, private bath, plenty of cloak and storage space. This very nice, $49 per person room is named. Building insulated. Between K.U. and downtown. M. R. Gall, 643 Macquarie Street, phone 111-165 LOST: New light tan trench coat. Taken from mceur's room in Watson Library, Tuesday 43n. Award for return. M. A. Hatch, English office, 2012 F-199 MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 732½ Mass. Phone 2353 TENNIS RACKETS RESTRUNG New Rackets, Balls Soft Balls, Bats RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. St. Phone 319 Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed Oil Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed 50s Shampoo and hair style with lacquer and color sparkles...55c Oil Shampoo and hair style with Permanents and End Curls $1.00 complete two-thirds the size of Texas.) Around Berlin in the north is flat country, and the Berlin section was once called the "sand box" of the nation. Lacquer and sparkles ...70c Revelon polish used on all manicures To the west is the Rhine region, famed for the beautiful river and the high hills and beautiful valleys which contain it. The southwestern section contains broad valleys and the exquisite Bavarian Tyrol, with lakes and woods. To the east lies the Black Forest, not high, but embracing as beautiful mountain-scapes and forests as one can find. In the south center is the famed Thuringian forest, not one of immense trees as one is accounted to think, but of smaller ones. It is a beautiful tree which, everlasting, make for great beauty. Everything is as though many of our beautiful American sections had been condensed into one small country. ... SPARKLES ... For Evening John Coleman-to us Americans who take the unity of a country for granted. 7 experienced hair stylists 941½ Mass. Phone 533 TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920 - 22 Mass. Phone 12 For Evening Lending much of the charm and color to these places are innumerable villages and hamlets, each with its one or two churches, lodged in the most impossible places in the mountain sections, or so thickly dotting the valleys as to make one wonder why several do not incorporate into one town. And with each section of the village, culture, a certain kind of folk, with definite language, costume, and living characteristics. Continued from page 1 They have evolved from groups which have occupied these districts for centuries under kings and dukes, and have remained strictly within their regional limits. The new government has accomplished a degree of unification of these peoples under one head, is attempting to establish firmly one country and one general culture. Germany has encountered a great problem and has already gone a long way toward this goal, but will require years to overcome the differences in areal cultures. That is one reason the Germans are proclaiming their new unity. They have actually never had such before, even under Bismarck or the republic. It is really a new thing *for them*, unintelligible JUST ONE MORE DAY TO SEE ONE OF THE BEST PICTURES EVER MADE! TODAY AND THURSDAY It Takes Its Place With "The Thin Man" and "It Happened One Night" A Volcanic Campus Romance! GINGER ROGERS JAMES STEWART "Vivacious Lady" MARCH OF TIME In Appreciation of Your Splendid Support and Patronage for This School Year We Are Celebrating--to us Americans who take the unity of a country for granted. ALSO Plus—Color Cartoon - News You'll Say "Bella! Bella! Wun- derbor!" When You See How Grand They are in... Wayne Morris Priscilla Lane "Love, Honor and Behave" K. U. Nights "YELLOW JACK" Friday - Saturday Swimming " Bei Mir Bist Du Schon" for the First Time on the Screen! SUNDAY "The Susie Q" "The Shag" Apple Sauce "The Organ Grinder" "Rise and Shine" "Peckin" "Truckin" ON OUR STAGE Robt. Montgomery Virginia Bruce BIG APPLE JAMBOREE Johnny O'Connor's To illustrate a great sectional difference in languages, I can tell a story about an American student who had been here only a short time. He purchased a wooden plate in a shop, on which was carved an inscription in German. When he asked what the inscription meant, the shopkeeper answered that he didn't know because it was in the Freiburg dialect, but that if the student came back in a week he would have它 translated it to English. Here was a merchant in Freiburg who could not translate the local dialect into classical German (to be sure, a dialect of the lower classes). This is not at all uncommon, for a north German has great difficulty in understanding a southerner (Bavarian); while the language of the workers on the northwest sequestre (e.g., Hamburg) is so distorted one must learn it almost as another language. Interesting to note about the matter is that it is strikingly near English. Think, then, how even language has been a barrier to unity in 'bible country.' The story of the American student has a rather enduring ending. He returned a week later, received the slip of paper, thanked the shopkeeper profusely for his trouble, and when he opened the paper at home found to his intense dimay of anger that he was being sent in Genre script, which may as well have been Chinese for all he could have read it! The city of Freiburg lies in a wide valley, a tributary of the Rhein, on the edge of the Black Forest. Its principal cathedral was begun in the twelfth century by the reigning duke of the day, and the city spread out around it for a common place. It is the couple of former villages. There are army barracks here and a fine airport, and many of the characteristics of a modernized European city; but Freiburg still retains the marks Night After Night—Hits! TODAY - TOMORROW Bargain Nite! 10c Then 15c Fred blows it slow and tender, and Carole hears a call to arms! CORE presents FRED MacMURRAY CAROLE LOMBARD SWING HIGH SWING LOW A Paramount Picture with CHARLES BUTTERWORTH JEAN DIXON and DOROTHY LAMOUR A King on the Throne . . . But Not the Real One! Clive Mary Helen BROOKS CARLISLE VINSON "Love in Exile" Drama . . . Mystery . . . Love! FRIDAY A Newspaper's Crusade Smashed Open Barriers ... For Her! Wendy Wolter Kent BARRIE PIDGEON TAYLOR "A Girl With Ideas" — AND — "RENFREW OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED" A thrilling tale of the northwest! Sun.—'100 Men and a Girl' of ages gone by. Most of the streets are narrow and crooked and, though there are now many new houses, the buildings are mostly those of the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth century types. The old university building (ca. sixteenth century) houses several of the institutes, but the main buildings are new and modern. An immense and wonderful new hospital is now being completed which will combine with the city's railroad network through the city. Only 12 miles to the west of Freiburg are the Rhine and France; forty to the south is Boel, Switzerland. Like most other foreign students, I live with a German family and take two meals a day with them. This is a good opportunity to learn what the average German thinks and feels and to see how he lives. An American soon learns to slow down the tempo of life to which he is accustomed, and to go without many living conveniences which he thought otherwise indispensable. Certainly everything is vast differently; you can always an unfortunate experience. Surprising enough, perhaps, is the fact that besiend learning a new way of life and becoming acquainted with a different country, one begins to realize just what kind or type of Freiburg im breisgau, Germany. Gartenstrasse 1, IV May 2, 1938. Yours very truly, JOHN B. COLEMAN. life he lives in his native land and, further, gets much better acquainted with his own country. The experiences of discovering one's own country, attained when one fists something to compare it with (another country) a r e usually named as the country that he renames a patriotism which he might previously thought could never exist! Always the Best! Shows 3-7-9 25c Til 7 NOW! ENDS TOMORROW PLUS! PLUS: "DONALD AND PLUTO" Unusual Occupations Fictional - Fox News Old Doc Bing Mixes a Sure Cure for the Blues! I should like to take this opportunity to give my most grateful thanks to the anonymous donor of this scholarship and to Chancellor Lindley and the members of the committee who administer it. This has been a year rich in experience, one which I shall never forget. My thanks go to all who have made it possible; SUNDAY! DICKINSON FRIDAY! And Saturday I shall sail from Southampton during the third week in August and expect to see the University of Kansas again in September. Also, Jayhawkers, bis September, Auf Wiedersehen'. Cosmopolitan Magazine's Startling Story . . . Spec- tacularly Films Find a ride home by advertising in the University Daily Kansan Classified section. Victor McLaglen 'Battle of Broadway' Brian Dontlevy - Louise Novick 'Four Men and a Prayer' Loretta Young RICHARD GREENE When these bottle-scarred Legionnaires lay siege to a city, it's a bright barrage of button popping laughs! GRADUATE Among our many appropriate suggestions in SWANK Jewelry, we picture the Personized cavat chain…bearing his own initials...and collar holder... at $2.00 per set. Soon! - "Kentucky Moonshine" Always a Big Double Show PATEE Adults 15c Kiddies 10c - Ends Tonite - Return Appearance ON OUR STAGE Radios Popular Singing Cowboy from KMBC TEX OWENS ALL NEW! ALL DIFFERENT! ON OUR SCREEN "First showing in Lowertown" "Arson Gang Busters" "Bolivingston" "Rosalind Keith" ALSO EDGAR KENNEDY Comedy Spasm Musical Novelty News Events "ACCIDENTS WILL THURSDAY 3 Days Big First Run Hits "ACCIDENTS WILL HAPPEN" RONALD REAGAN GLORIA BLONDELL DICK PURCELL "Remember the Alamo" Rings Again — As the Sons of Texas Die for Freedom! "HEROES OF THE ALAMO" With a Cost of Famous Historical Characters Davy Crackett - Sam Houston Gen. Santa Anna and others